Abstract

To track the prevalence and stability of clinically significant psychological distress and to identify potentially modifiable in-hospital symptoms predictive of long-term distress (physical, psychological, and social impairment). We obtained data from the Burn Model Systems project, a prospective, multisite, cohort study of major burn injury survivors. The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) was used to assess symptoms in-hospital (n = 1232) and at 6 (n = 790), 12 (n = 645), and 24 (n = 433) months post burn. Distress was examined dimensionally (BSI's Global Severity Index (GSI)) and categorically (groups formed by dichotomizing GSI: T score > or =63). Attrition was unrelated to in-hospital GSI score. Significant in-hospital psychological distress occurred in 34% of the patients, and clinically significant and reliable change in symptom severity by follow-up visits occurred infrequently. Principal components analysis of in-hospital distress symptoms demonstrated "alienation" and "anxiety" factors that robustly predicted distress at 6, 12, and 24 months, controlling for correlates of baseline distress. This is the largest prospective, multisite, cohort study of patients with major burn injury. We found that clinically significant in-hospital psychological distress was common and tends to persist. Two structural components of in-hospital distress seemed particularly predictive of long-term distress. Research is needed to determine if early recognition and treatment of patients with in-hospital psychological distress can improve long-term outcomes.

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